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Anne Hathaway rolled up to Ralph Lauren’s Fall 2025 show in New York City looking like the movie star she’s always been. Draped in a khaki trench, a white tank, and sequin-splattered distressed khakis (yes, bedazzled ripped jeans are officially in again, fellow millennials), Hathaway was every bit the effortlessly cool NFYW front-row fixture. But naturally, the internet didn’t stop at her outfit.
It took approximately five minutes for photos of her face — tight, glowing, suspiciously line-free — to hit social media, and the conversation got loud. “She looks stunning as always. But dang that ponytail looks painful 😅,” one commenter joked. Another quipped, “If 2025 is the year where everyone mysteriously looks two decades younger — what will 2035 bring?”
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And, as it always does, speculation followed. Botox? Facelift? Literal witchcraft? “My fav is when people say ‘this is how you age when you’re unproblematic!!’ about Anne Hathaway,” a tweet read. “Like no, this is how you age when you have a stringent skincare regimen, apply SPF religiously, get light Botox, and a deep plane facelift. And there’s nothing wrong with any of those things.” Which — to be very clear — there isn’t.
Anne Hathaway, Michelle Williams, and Naomi Watts at the Ralph Lauren Fall RTW 2025 fashion show held at the Jack Shainman Gallery on April 17, 2025 in New York.
Although she has never admitted to getting work done, the Versace Icons campaign star notably spoke out about the pressure to get plastic surgery in 2008. The actress told Express that “there’s a lot of pressure on young women” from an early age, “when you first become aware of your own looks in relation to other women’s looks.”
“You just want to be cookie-cutter beautiful. And sometimes you think, ‘Maybe I could change something about myself to fit that mold,’” she explained. “I’m no exception to that.” The actress also stopped drinking in 2019, which also is a likely reason she is looking extra glowy.
The real issue isn’t whether Hathaway has dabbled in a little injectables, or if that gravity-defying ponytail is doing half the heavy lifting. It’s that we keep having this same, tired, pick-apart-women’s-faces conversation like it’s a national emergency. Hathaway herself has weighed in on aging more than once, telling TODAY, “I don’t think about age. To me, aging is another word for living.” In The New York Times, she opened up about hitting 40, getting sober, and finally feeling good in her own skin: “I certainly am way more comfortable in my skin in my 40s than I was in my 20s.”
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And you know what she’s never said? That she’s a saintly, untouched, all-natural unicorn. Nor should she have to. As she told Vogue, she takes her cues from Gen Z, a generation that “define themselves by themselves.”
Maybe we should try that too — and let women look how they want, age how they want, and wear.